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COVID-19 India News Punjab

Amarinder rules out complete lockdown in Punjab

He also announced a series of relaxations and relief measures to alleviate the woes of various sections of the people amid the prolonged crisis….reports Asian Lite News

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Wednesday again ruled out a complete lockdown, noting that the restrictions currently in place were more stringent than the lockdown conditions in many other states.

He also announced a series of relaxations and relief measures to alleviate the woes of various sections of the people amid the prolonged crisis.

The relaxations include phased opening of shops and various incentives for the housing sector, including three-month extension in permission period of construction of plots and projects for allotments, whether private or allotted, by state urban development authorities.

Amid spiralling Covid cases, the Chief Minister ordered limiting of the number of teachers in government schools to 50 per cent, with the rest taking online classes from home.

He also directed the Food Department to prepare 500,000 additional food packets for distribution among Covid patients, to ensure that every patient individually gets a packet even where there are more than one patient in a family.

The state government has also announced additional 10 kg atta for 1.41 crore Smart Ration Card beneficiaries. The food aid is in addition to the 100,000 lakh food kits, containing 10 kg atta, 2 kg chana and 2 kg sugar already sanctioned for all poor people testing positive with Covid.

It is also additional to the food aid announced by the Centre.

Virtually chairing a Cabinet meeting, the Chief Minister compared the Punjab restrictions with the curbs in place in states like Delhi, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Kerala, among others, and pointed out that it was not necessary to impose a total lockdown.

The Chief Minister said to meet immediate and urgent needs of the people at the local level, it had been decided by the government to authorise sarpanches to spend up to Rs 5,000 per day, subject to a maximum of Rs 50,000, out of panchayat funds for providing emergency relief by way of food and medicines to the poor and needy in the villages.

All urban local bodies have also been empowered to provide emergency relief, including food and medicines to the poor and needy, from the municipal fund.

Also read:Amandeep Singh : Punjabi music is making waves

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No entry to Punjab without Covid negative report

Even the government offices and banks will work at 50 percent strength except those involved in Covid management…reports Asian Lite News.

Making the restrictions tough owing to the coronavirus surge, the Punjab government on Sunday said nobody would be allowed to enter the state without a negative Covid report not more than 72 hours old or a vaccination certificate over two weeks old.

The Punjab government announced not more than two persons can travel in a car, 50 per cent staff strength at government offices and a negative coronavirus test report must for those entering the state as part of added curbs amid rising COVID-19 cases and fatalities.

Also, all non-essential shops would be closed in the state till May 15.

Even the government offices and banks will work at 50 per cent strength except those involved in Covid management.

All four-wheeler vehicles, including cars and taxis, won’t be allowed to have more than two passengers.

Vehicles carrying patients to hospitals have been exempted. No pillion riders on motorcycles and scooters except those of the same family and living in the same house, reads a notification.

No gathering of more than 10 people allowed even for marriage, cremations or funerals.

The state will see daily night curfew from 6 p.m. to 5 a.m. and weekend curfew from 6 p.m. on Friday till 5 a.m. on Monday.

All bars, cinema halls, gyms, spas, swimming pools, coaching centres and sports complexes will be closed.

The restaurants, cafes, coffee shops, dhabas and fast-food outlets can only function for home delivery till 9 p.m.

An appeal would also be made to farmer unions and religious leaders not to hold gatherings and restrict the number of protestors.

With a ban on social, cultural, sports and other gatherings already in place, there will also be a complete ban on government functions, such as inaugurations, foundation stone laying ceremonies unless permission of the deputy commissioner has been obtained.

People wearing face masks walk on a road in Rawalpindi of Pakistan’s Punjab province

All weekly markets, such as apni mandis, to be closed.

All educational institutes, including schools and colleges, to remain closed but the teaching and non-teaching staff of government schools to attend duty.  

Punjab is among the worst-hit states in the second wave of the pandemic. On Saturday, it registered 7,041 fresh COVID-19 cases, the highest in a day, bringing the infection count to 3,77,990, while 138 more fatalities took the toll to 9,160.

Also Read-Anti farm bill agitations hit freight train services in Punjab

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Tractor Rally: 22 FIRs registered against farmers

A total of 22 FIRs have been filed by the Delhi Police so far in connection with the violence witnessed during a farmers’ tractor rally on the Republic Day, officials said on Wednesday.

The FIRs were registered under Sections dealing with riots, damage to public property and assault on public servants with deadly weapons.

The police have begun analysing video footage available to identify the violent protesters, who damaged public property and attacked Delhi Police personnel.

Clash between Farmers and police as Farmers enter Delhi on occasion of Republic Day ,26 January ,2021 (photo: Pallav Paliwal)

In all, 86 policemen were injured in the violence as farmers marched inside Delhi with their tractors ahead of the scheduled time agreed upon with police authorities of Delhi, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.

Farmers had rallied with about 6,000-7,000 tractors at Singhu border around 8.30 am on January 26. As per the earlier-decided plan, they were supposed to reach Sanjay Gandhi Transport Nagar and then take a right turn. However, the protesters led by ‘Nihangs’ riding horses and armed with swords and other sharp-edged weapons charged at the police and broke through several layers of barricades set up between Mukarba Chowk and Transport Nagar, the Delhi Police said.

“At ITO, a large group of farmers, who had come from Gazipur and Singhu borders, attempted to move towards New Delhi district. When they were stopped by the policemen, a section of farmers became violent and broke through the barricades, damaged iron grills and road dividers and even tried to run over policemen deployed at barricades with their tractors,” a senior police officer said.

The farmers swarmed the Red Fort and waved farmer union flags from its ramparts. They even hoisted farmer union flags as well as a pennant with a Sikh religious symbol from a flagpole.

Clash between Farmers and police as Farmers enter Delhi on occasion of Republic Day ,26 January ,2021 (photo: Pallav Paliwal)

The cat-and-mouse games between the police and protesting farmers continued until late Tuesday evening. Most of the incidents were reported from Mukarba Chowk, Gazipur, A-Point ITO, Seemapuri, Nangloi T-Point, Tikri Border and Red Fort.

Nearly 300 artistes, including children, who were part of the official Republic Day parade in Delhi on Tuesday were rescued by police after they were stranded near the Red Fort due to violence and chaos in the area.

Also Read-Roadblock as farmers refuse to accept committee

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Rahul: Violence is not the solution to any problem

After clashes broke out between the agitating farmers and the police in Delhi during the tractor march, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Tuesday denounced the violence.

He tweeted in Hindi, “Violence is not the solution to any problem, whoever gets injured the loss is of the country. In the interest of the country the farm laws should be withdrawn.”

Hundreds of protesting farmers reached the iconic Red Fort in the national capital as the ‘Kisan Gantantra parade’ turned violent at several places here.

Farmers riding their tractors and bikes arrived at the Red Fort with the Indian National flag in their hands.

Visuals showed farmers assembled in front of the Red Fort even as hundreds of farmers clashed with the Delhi Police personnel near ITO intersection in central Delhi, which turned into a war zone on the eve of the Republic Day.

The visuals also showed several farmers entering into the iconic Red Fort premises, as the security personnel were outnumbered by the farmers.

The Prime Minister hoists the national flag on August 15 here, which marks the country’s Independence Day every year.

Meanwhile, the agitating farmers at the ITO intersection clashed with the Delhi Police personnel as they pelted stones and charged the policemen with their tractors.

The police fired several rounds of tear gas shells and also resorted to lathi-charge on multiple occasions as the farmers remained adamant to move towards Red Fort.

The Rapid Action Force (RAF) was soon deployed at the ITO intersection.

Also Read-Farmers tractor rally turns violent

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Amarinder: These voices will continue to rise

Asserting that his heart was with the farmers amid the Republic Day celebrations, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Tuesday said the Centre had deliberately kept Punjab out of the high-powered committee initially as they knew that the voices of protest would rise from here.

He declared that “these voices will continue to rise” till the farmers’ interests are secured.

Punjab was included in the committee only after he personally wrote to the Centre on the issue, said the Chief Minister, making it clear that neither he nor his government were ever asked or consulted about the ‘black’ farm laws.

Appealing to the Prime Minister to fulfil the demands of the agitating farmers, who are sitting at Delhi’s borders for the past two months, the Chief Minister said the farm laws are “completely wrong as they are against federalism, since agriculture is a state subject under Schedule 7 of the Indian constitution”.

Unfurling the Tricolour here at Raja Bhalindra Singh sports complex here, the Chief Minister recalled the contribution of Baba Saheb B.R. Ambedkar, who had drafted the constitution which remains the bedrock of the nation’s governance till date.

Hoping that the tractor march of the farmers passed off as peacefully as their agitation so far has been, the Chief Minister said “old farmers are sitting at the borders of the national capital not for themselves but for their children and the future generations”.

Declaring that his government was with the farmers, he said, “be peaceful, and the country is with you”. He noted that 122 MPs in the UK had spoken in favour of the farmers and other countries had also supported the protests as the farmers had been peaceful all along.

Amarinder Singh lamented that he never thought he would see a day when Punjab’s farmers, who had made the nation self-sufficient in food by ushering in the Green Revolution and ensured that India never needed to beg for food under America’s PL 480, would be forgotten in this manner.

At one time, Punjab farmers were contributing 50 per cent to the food basket, and even now contribute 40 per cent of the total foodgrains, the Chief Minister said, adding that “we can never forget what they have done for our country”.

With production now being carried out also in Ganga, Narmada and Kaveri basins, the farmers of Punjab were being sidelined, said the Chief Minister, adding, “God forbid a day will come that Punjab would be needed by the nation again”.

Not once did the Congress, which had been providing MSP, indicated that it would ever be withdrawn or talked about winding up the Food Corporation of India, he said, pointing out that with the public distribution system depending on the government procurement, the poor would also suffer if the new farm laws are not repealed.

Pointing out that 20 per cent of India’s army comprised Punjabis, the Chief Minister slammed the BJP-led government at the Centre for not bothering about the families of Punjab’s jawans fighting on the fronts to protect the country.

Punjab’s soldiers are posted at all fronts, safeguarding the borders, he said, adding that the nation needs to be prepared to meet the multiple threats posed by the collective power of China and Pakistan.

Despite Punjab’s size being reduced drastically in the Partition and then the state’s reorganisation, it had stood for the nation always, and will continue to do so, he added.

Lauding the state’s farmers for the record wheat and paddy production amid the pandemic, Amarinder Singh listed out various measures taken by his government for their welfare, notably the loan waiver and abolition of ‘kurki’.

While 5.62 lakh farmers had already been provided debt relief of Rs 4,700 crore, 2.82 lakh landless farm labourers will be given relief this year, he announced.

The Chief Minister also thanked all those, especially the healthcare and frontline workers, who helped the state fight the Covid-19 pandemic and played a vital role in managing the lockdown seamlessly without inconvenience to the people.

He made special mention of the Punjab Police, who, for the first time, arranged for distribution of food to ensure that nobody went hungry.

The Chief Minister, on the occasion, saluted the martyrs of the freedom struggle, including those of the Jallianwala Bagh tragedy, and also remembered the great Gurus whose Prakash Parv he has been fortunate in celebrating as Chief Minister, both in his first and current tenures.

He said his government was geared up to celebrate the 400th Prakash Utsav of Guru Teg Bahadur in a befitting manner, and pointed out that the Republic Day tableau of the Punjab government displayed on Rajpath was also dedicated to the historic occasion.

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Amarinder urges PM Modi to repeal farm laws

Stressing that there was nothing wrong with the demands of the farmers, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh urged the Prime Minister to immediately repeal the farm laws in order to resolve the crisis.

Categorically rejecting as “highly irresponsible” reports in a section of the media that Punjab had already implemented the new farm laws, the Chief Minister said Food Minister Bharat Bhushan Ashu’s statement had been mischievously twisted by one newspaper, with others picking it up.

Punjab was the first state to have opposed the Central farm laws and, in fact, passed amendments Bills to negate their dangerous impact on agriculture, he pointed out, slamming the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) for spreading misinformation on the issue with their fake propaganda machinery.

The Governor, he said, “should have forwarded our Bills to the President for assent, which he has not done”.

The Chief Minister made it clear that Punjab would not allow the lives of its farmers to be ruined by the new laws.

“We will do whatever possible to help the farmers and their families, for whom the state government had already started two helplines on which they could reach out in case of any emergency,” he said.

Urging the Prime Minister to withdraw the controversial laws and talk to the farmers, Amarinder Singh said, “The farmers have made their stand very clear that the laws should be repealed. It is the job of the government of India to listen to them.”

The Centre can bring in new laws after due consultation with the farmers, he said, pointing out that the Constitution has been amended many times and can be done again for the revocation of the recently enacted farm legislations.

Noting that farmers from across the country had joined the protests against the farm laws, Amarinder Singh said after six-seven meetings, it was time that the matter is resolved and the farmers, who are sitting out in the cold and rains, can go back and everyone else can get on with their lives.

The Chief Minister lambasted those calling the protesting farmers Naxals and terrorists, terming it as wrong and irresponsible.

Also Read-Apex court concerned over farmers’ protest

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SFJ Plans New Move For Referendum 2020

The secessionist Sikhs For Justice (SFJ) has announced to recruit 1,000 “qualified referendum ambassadors” who will register voters in their respective assigned geographical areas for ‘Referendum 2020’…reports RAJNISH SINGH

Indian anti-terror agencies have alerted law-enforcement agencies in different states after the banned pro-Khalistan group Sikhs For Justice (SFJ) on Wednesday announced to undertake a door-to-door drive for voter registration in Punjab for its secessionist agenda ‘Referendum-2020’.

The US-based SFJ has adopted the new tactic as its online ‘Referendum-2020’ voter campaign on Canadian and Russian portals could not gain much traction, an intelligence officer as well as two National Investigation Agency (NIA) officials said on the condition of anonymity.

The secessionist SFJ now plans to cover 12,000 villages of Punjab in 30 days, starting from September 21, for its voter registration campaign. To this end, the SFJ has announced to recruit 1,000 “qualified referendum ambassadors” who will register voters in their respective assigned geographical areas for ‘Referendum 2020’.

The SFJ has promised to pay a monthly stipend of Rs 7,500 each to these so-called referendum ambassadors for their services.

The SFJ had earlier announced to hold its ‘Referendum-2020’ campaign in November this year.

The Indian agencies were alerted after SFJ’s General Counsel Gurpatwant Singh Pannun on Wednesday announced the door-to-door voter registration campaign, saying that “by blocking the access to SFJ’s voter registration websites and mobile apps, India is disenfranchising the people of Punjab”.

“We are now starting a door-to-door voter registration to ensure maximum participation of the populace in the ‘Referendum 2020’, which involves a fundamental question of secession of Punjab from India,” said Pannun, who has been designated a terrorist along with eight others by the Centre.

Earlier this month, the group had offered Rs 3,500 each as grant to woo Punjab farmers ahead of its anti-India campaign ‘Referendum-2020’. The group had announced to distribute the money on a monthly basis to each of the Punjab farmers who have defaulted on agricultural loans, as part of its strategy to woo them ahead of the ‘Referendum-2020’ campaign.

Based on the NIA’s recommendation, the Ministry of Home Affairs had in the beginning of this month also ordered the attachment of properties of the SFJ’s key leaders — Gurpatwant Singh Pannun and Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

Pannun’s 46 kanals of land in Khankot village in Amritsar and 11 kanals and 13.5 marlas in Sultanwind suburban in Bhainiwal area in the same district were attached. Nijjar’s 11 kanals and 13 marlas of land in Bhar village in Jalandhar’s Singhpura was also confiscated.

Pannun is the SFJ’s General Counsel while Nijjar is ‘Referendum 2020’ Canada coordinator.

The NIA said that the SFJ, headed by Pannun, is presently making efforts to propagate the ‘Referendum-2020’ on the social media.

The SFJ is also trying to hold meetings in the US and other countries to instigate and mobilise the Sikh diaspora for its illegal activities.

The MHA declared the SFJ as an ‘unlawful association’ under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act through a notification dated July 10 last year. The MHA, in a notification dated July 1, had designated Pannun, Nijjar and seven other pro-Khalistanis as ‘terrorists’ as per the Act’s Fourth Schedule.

The SFJ had chosen Punjab, Delhi, and Jammu and Kashmir to launch its online voter registration on July 4 for ‘Referendum 2020’ through different portals but reportedly did not get support.

The group has even used the Canadian cyberspace twice for launching its voter registration in Delhi and Jammu and Kashmir.

The group is headed by Avtar Singh Pannun and Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, who have been advocating the cause of ‘Khalistan’ as well as the online secessionist campaign for the referendum.

The SFJ is backed by Pakistan-based handlers in providing money and logistic support to radical Sikh elements in Punjab to carry out subversive activities.

Even though Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence has been backing the malicious SFJ campaign, with a large number of Pakistani Twitter handles tweeting in favour of the exercise, the secessionist agenda of the SFJ has been rejected by the Sikhs across India.